State your desired language and reason why if you think it might be rejected for example perhaps there's a dialect and you feel it should be separated.. or some shit. Nothing is guaranteed and decisions can always be appealed in the future preferably 7 days later.

Oh and the Zhirkov book is mainly (completely?) x86_64, there are quite a few differences. And '64 has two different calling conventions: one for Linux and one for Windows. They differ in which registers are saved to/retrieved from the stack on function calls.

New settings for this board will slowly be implemented. More changes to come.

* imgs will not be allowed.

* Languages will have their designated areas and are only used by people who are already familiar with the language to some degree. "New to programming" users refer to the solid foundation sticky or elsewhere on the internet/8ch.

* Asking "how do I start or what language should I learn?" Is not allowed and will be removed/ignored. Do some research and google those questions yourself because we cannot afford to answer the most redundant questions on the internet here anymore. More people ask those questions alone on the internet than the number of people who die from cancer- good god! I can understand you just want to maybe talk to someone or just needing some attention- that is a path you must walk alone chosen one.

Once you have become more familiarized with language (or are already) point your question to the appropriate language/thread sticky.

Other threads will be for personal projects or challenges you may want to bring up?.. And try to keep it original :) Other purposes will be added here later.

Finally I don't want to hear any complaints about other users or programmers in general or "my language is better"/other smug-cringy comments. This just gets conversations off the tracks and brings up emotions unchained. We don't need any more sissies here.

Sharing resources on good materials will be ideally posted in dedicated thread- but not required. If worthy enough it will be included in the respective language's first post.

Teach yourselves some self-restraint and try to be respectful to each other (not required but always appreciated)

How to get a solid foundation in compsci mathematicsAnonymous08/16/15 (Sun) 03:56:08c71b16No.3034[Reply]

This guide assumes you forgot everything from highschool. No you don't have to learn any of this in order to program you can just start hacking around every .c file in your kernel.org git source clone and see what happens. Why would you want to learn math? Because it will change your thinking. You won't be easily fooled by bullshit, you will have tools to sort through obvious logical fallacies. You will be able to optimize programs and create your own algorithms. You will be able to estimate. Above all, you will be able to solve problems using computation which is what computer science is all about. And least of all, you will get paid more than anybody else without this knowledge so if your goal is shekels then read on. Note: DO THE EXERCISES. You won't learn otherwise. Books instead of video lectures were chosen because they've lasted 30+ years some of them in relevancy in the field, also lectures disappear all the time like when MIT nuked all one prof's Physics OCW lectures because he tried to pickup a student, setting a precedent that at anytime this information can disappear. Read a book nigga.

Math Preliminary

Basic Mathematics by Serge Lang

Buy/Pirate this book (he's dead). It's highschool math, from the perspective of a Mathematician. You will learn up Pre-Calculus and be prepared for rigorous proofs later.

An Introduction to Mathematical Reasoning" by Peter J Eccels

This changes you from rote drilling and being a human calculator in highschool to learning what math actually is, and what proofs do. Excellent, excellent book.

How to Solve It by G. Polya

How to do proofs, written in 1940s and still for sale in every Chapters/B&N bookstore to this day because it's the best proof helper that exists.

Welcome to Proofs

Calculus" by Spivak

Actually, you are learning ANALYSIS, in addition to calculus. Torrent the 3rd edition w/the answer book. This is a fucking hard assed book, you may be bePost too long. Click here to view the full text.

Hey! I am more and more convinced that there is no such thing as a shit idea, because execution is what really matters. Lots of successful products, lots of famous apps came from ideas that were already implemented, but badly - or not good enough.

Personally, I liked your post on 4/sci/ and I think your idea has got potential. The only major drawback is that people are lazy, they don't follow through their plans, not many are really committed to their goals, and thus a study related app that really works can only be aimed at that niche of people that are already trying to do something.

Maybe we can really do something about it.

But in the meantime, what are you trying to study (except Spivak, I guess) and would you like to finally start attacking some book together?